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1

A bioethical analysis of sexual reorientation interventions: [the ethics of conversion therapy]. Parkland, FL: Brown Walker Press, 2003.

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2

Pyŏngdŭn sahoe, ap'ŭn kyoyuk: Taejŭng yopŏp esŏ kujo chŏnhwan ŭro = Sick society, painful education : symptomatic therapy to frame conversion. Kyŏnggi-do P'aju-si: Hanul, 2014.

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3

Pledger, Julia. A five-year study of the effects of baseline body mass index on results of conversion to insulin therapy in patients with Type 2 diabetes. London: University of Surrey Roehampton, 2002.

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4

Bergström, Anneli. From words to conversation: Evaluation of aphasia therapy. Göteborg: Göteborg University, Department of Linguistics, 2007.

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5

Bergström, Anneli. From words to conversation: Evaluation of aphasia therapy. Göteborg: Göteborg University, Department of Linguistics, 2007.

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6

Anderson, Harlene. Conversation, language, and possibilities: A postmodern approach to therapy. New York, N.Y: BasicBooks, 1997.

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7

Vickers, Candace. Communication recovery: Group conversation activities for adults. San Antonio, Tex: Communication Skill Builders, 1998.

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8

A song just for me: Stirred by music to conversation and compassion. McKinleyville, California: Fithian Press, 2014.

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9

Gunzburg, John C. Healing through meeting: Martin Buber's conversational approach to psychotherapy. London: J. Kingsley, 1997.

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10

Gale, Jerry Edward. Conversation analysis of therapeutic discourse: The pursuit of a therapeutic agenda. Norwood, N.J: Ablex Pub. Corp., 1991.

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11

Lesser, Ruth. Cognitive neuropsychology and conversation analysis in aphasia: An introductory casebook. London: Whurr, 1999.

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12

E, Densmore Ann, and Harman Deborah R, eds. Language intervention with school-aged children: Conversation, narrative, and text. San Diego, Calif: Singular Pub. Group, 1995.

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13

Drescher, Jack. Sexual Conversion Therapy. CRC Press, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781315272955.

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14

(Editor), Ariel Shidlo, and Michael Schroeder (Editor), eds. Sexual Conversion Therapy: Ethical, Clincial, and Research Perspectives. Haworth Medical Press, 2002.

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15

Ariel, Ph.D. Shidlo (Editor), Michael Schroeder (Editor), and Jack Drescher (Editor), eds. Sexual Conversion Therapy: Ethical, Clinical, and Research Perspectives. Haworth Medical Press, 2002.

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16

Svensson, Travis K. Bioethical Analysis of Sexual Reorientation Interventions: The Ethics of Conversion Therapy. Brown Walker Press, 2004.

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17

Zamin, Monique. Development of a route conversion program for antimicrobial therapy at the Toronto Hospital. 1994.

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18

Ashton, Kerry. Saint Unshamed : A Gay Mormon's Life: Healing From the Shame of Religion, Rape, Conversion Therapy & Cancer. Lynn Wolf Enterprises, 2019.

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19

Straight to Jesus: Sexual and Christian Conversions in the Ex-Gay Movement. University of California Press, 2006.

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20

Skotnicki, Andrew. Conversion and the Rehabilitation of the Penal System. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190880835.001.0001.

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The contemporary practice of criminal detention is a protracted exercise in needless violence predicated upon two foundational errors. The first is the inability to view those enmeshed in its rubrics and institutions as human beings fully capable of responding to an affirmative accompaniment rather than maltreatment and invasive forms of therapy. The second is a pervasive dualism that erects an illusory barrier between criminal detainees and those empowered to supervise, punish, and/or rehabilitate them. This book maintains that the criminal justice system can only be “rehabilitated” by eliminating punishment and policies based upon deterrence, rehabilitation, and the hyper-incapacitation of the urban poor in favor of the original justification for the practice of confinement: conversion. The latter will be presented as a progressive expansion of one’s intellectual, moral, and spiritual horizons that is self-generated and leads to the goal of including everyone and everything in a careful embrace.
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21

Perkins, Lisa, and Ruth Lesser. Cognitive Neuropsychology and and Conversion Analysis in Aphasia - An Introductory Casebook. Wiley, 2005.

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22

Fitzgerald, P. E. Therapy Talk: Conversation Analysis in Practice. Palgrave Macmillan, 2013.

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23

Fitzgerald, P. Therapy Talk: Conversation Analysis in Practice. Palgrave Macmillan, 2013.

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24

How to survive a summer. 2017.

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25

Note, Quilt. Quilting Is My Therapy, Quilt Project History Journal: Quilters Notebook, Gift for Quilter, Sewer Presents, Quilt Pattern Graph Paper, Quilters Reference Table, ... Sizes Conversion Tables 8. 5 X 11 121 Pages. Independently Published, 2020.

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26

Note, Quilt. Funny Quilting Quotes, Quilting Is My Therapy, Quilt Project History Journal: Quilters Notebook, Gift for Quilter, Sewer Presents, Quilt Pattern Graph Paper, Quilters Reference Table, ... Sizes Conversion Tables 8. 5 X 11 121 Pages. Independently Published, 2020.

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27

Conversation Language and Possibilities: A Postmodern Approach to Therapy. Basic Books, 1996.

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28

Sinton, Jamie W. Perioperative Management of the Child Following an Extremity Amputation. Edited by Erin S. Williams, Olutoyin A. Olutoye, Catherine P. Seipel, and Titilopemi A. O. Aina. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190678333.003.0056.

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Postamputation pain is multifactorial in nature. Pain often begins prior to the surgical amputation and can be related to trauma or malignancy. Types of pain experienced include nociceptive, neuropathic, phantom, and stump. Control of pain preoperatively and acutely in the postoperative phase, may prevent the conversion from acute to chronic pain. Each patient undergoing amputation experiences nociceptive pain due to surgery, and the overwhelming majority experience neuropathic and phantom limb pain as well. Goal-targeted pain therapies can reduce pain burden perioperatively. Multimodal analgesia begins preoperatively with antineuropathic agents; continues intraoperatively with regional anesthetics, anti-inflammatories, and opioid therapy; and continues for approximately 6 weeks postoperatively with nonpharmacologic and continued pharmacologic therapy.
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29

Vickers, Candace. Communication Recovery: Group Conversation Activities for Adults. Psychological Corp, 1999.

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30

(Editor), Jacqueline Thrash, and None (Illustrator), eds. Common Phrase Translation: Spanish for English Speakers for Occupational Therapy, Physical Therapy, and Speech Therapy. Jacqueline Thrash, 2006.

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31

Adam, Sheila, Sue Osborne, and John Welch. Cardiovascular problems. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199696260.003.0005.

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The cardiovascular chapter discusses the physiology, assessment, and treatment of cardiovascular disorders in the critically ill patient. It gives an in-depth explanation of non-invasive and invasive monitoring procedures (such as ECG, pulse oximetry, oesophageal Doppler, and pulmonary artery catheterization). It includes the measurement of oxygen delivery and consumption, and explains diagnostic techniques such as echocardiography. The chapter includes the management and optimization of goal-directed therapies for specific conditions including coronary heart disease (such as myocardial infarction and angina), shock, valvular heart disease, and heart failure. Interventional treatment and specific drug therapy are discussed, including percutaneous coronary intervention, cardiac pacing, and electrical conversion.
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32

Nixon, Heather C. Voltage Disturbances During Pregnancy. Edited by Matthew D. McEvoy and Cory M. Furse. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190226459.003.0052.

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This chapter covers the incidence, etiology, and treatment of the most common electrocardiogram and rhythm disturbances encountered during pregnancy. Baseline electrocardiogram changes associated with pregnancy include left ventricular hypertrophy and ST segment depressions secondary to anatomic and metabolic changes of pregnancy. The most common arrhythmias include atrial and ventricular ectopy, which are usually benign in nature. Supraventricular and ventricular tachycardia are also discussed in detail, along with the impact of antiarrhythmic and electrical conversion therapy on fetal and maternal well-being. An understanding of the pathophysiology, assessment, and treatment of these rhythm disturbances is requisite knowledge for all anesthesiologists to provide optimal and timely care to parturients.
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33

(Editor), Anssi Peräkylä, Charles Antaki (Editor), Sanna Vehviläinen (Editor), and Ivan Leudar (Editor), eds. Conversation Analysis and Psychotherapy. Cambridge University Press, 2008.

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34

Conversation analysis and psychotherapy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008.

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35

Intimacy, Trust Conversation Emotional. Couples Therapy Work Note Book: Planner for Create Trust Conversation Who Stay Noted in Paper Book Forever, Build Deep Connection Relationship Therapy. Independently Published, 2020.

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36

Schaef, Anne Wilson, Hal Zina Bennett, and Michael Toms. Moving Beyond Therapy, Towards Wholeness: Anne Wilson Schaef in Conversation With Michael Toms (New Dimensions Books). Aslan Pub, 1996.

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37

Nat, Roxana, and Andreas Eigentler. Cell Culture, iPS Cells and Neurodegenerative Diseases. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190233563.003.0013.

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Somatic reprogramming technology, which enables the conversion of adult human non-neural cells into neurons, has progressed rapidly in recent years. The derivation of patient-specific induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells has become routine. The inherent broad differentiation potential of iPS cells makes possible the generation of diverse types of human neurons. This constitutes a remarkable step in facilitating the development of more appropriate and comprehensive preclinical human disease models, as well as for high throughput drug screenings and cell therapy. This chapter reviews recent progress in the human iPS cell culture models related to common and rare NDDs, such as Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, Huntington’s disease, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, spinal muscular atrophy, and degenerative ataxias. It focuses on the pathophysiological features revealed in cell cultures, and the neuronal subtypes most affected in NDDs. The chapter discusses the validity, limitation, and improvements of this system in faithfully and reproducibly recapitulating disease pathology.
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38

Talk to me: Conversation strategies for parents of children on the autism spectrum or with speech and language impairments. 2014.

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39

Gunzburg, John C. Healing Through Meeting: Martin Buber's Conversational Approach to Psychotherapy. Jessica Kingsley Publishers, 1996.

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40

McGowan, Mary Kate. On Covert Exercitives. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198738831.003.0008.

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It is familiar from speech act theory how saying so can make it so. When the C.E.O. declares that no more overtime will be approved, for example, the C.E.O. thereby enacts a new company policy; her words effect an immediate change to the norms and policies operative in that company. Clearly, speech can enact facts about what is permissible and the familiar way for speech to do this is via an exercise of speaker authority. In this essay, though, I argue for a different way that speech enacts permissibility facts. Starting in the kinematics (i.e. the mechanics) of conversation, I first argue that conversational contributions routinely enact norms for the very conversation to which they contribute. I then argue that this phenomenon generalizes in a way that illuminates the crucial role of speech in enacting and perpetuating social hierarchy.
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41

Vincent, Nicole A., Thomas Nadelhoffer, and Allan McCay, eds. Neurointerventions and the Law. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190651145.001.0001.

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This volume makes a contribution to the field of neurolaw by investigating issues raised by the development, use, and regulation of neurointerventions. The broad range of topics covered in these chapters reflects neurolaw’s growing social import, and its rapid expansion as an academic field of inquiry. Some authors investigate the criminal justice system’s use of neurointerventions to make accused defendants fit for trial, to help reform convicted offenders, or to make condemned inmates sane enough for execution, while others interrogate the use, regulation, and social impact of cognitive enhancement medications and devices. Issues raised by neurointervention-based gay conversion “therapy”, the efficacy and safety of specific neurointervention methods, the legitimacy of their use and regulation, and their implications for authenticity, identity, and responsibility are among the other topics investigated. The focus on neurointerventions also highlights tacit assumptions about human nature that have important implications for jurisprudence. For all we know, at present such things as people’s capacity to feel pain, their sexuality, and the dictates of their conscience, are unalterable. But neurointerventions could hypothetically turn such constants into variables. The increasing malleability of human nature means that analytic jurisprudential claims (true in virtue of meanings of jurisprudential concepts) must be distinguished from synthetic jurisprudential claims (contingent on what humans are actually like). Looking at the law through the lens of neurointerventions thus also highlights the growing need for a new distinction—between analytic jurisprudence and synthetic jurisprudence—to tackle issues that increasingly malleable humans will face when they encounter novel opportunities and challenges.
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42

Fomberstein, Kenneth, Marissa Rubin, Dipan Patel, John-Paul Sara, and Abhishek Gupta. Perioperative Opioid Analgesics of Use in Pain Management for Spine Surgery. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190626761.003.0004.

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This chapter compares the basic properties of several opioid analgesics and explores their applications in perioperative pain control in spine surgery. Parenteral opioids have long been the cornerstone of treatment for postoperative pain; they work by inhibiting voltage-gated calcium channels and increasing potassium influx, which results in reduced neuronal excitability, thereby inhibiting the ascending transmission of painful stimuli and activating the descending inhibitory pathways. This chapter reviews concepts including opioid conversion and rotation, opioid tolerance, and opioid cross-tolerance. It discusses common opioid side effects, and it explores the perioperative use of several specific opioids including remifentanil, sufentanil, methadone, oxycodone, morphine, and tapentadol and discusses their use in spine surgery. Additionally, this chapter discusses patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) and its importance in postoperative pain control.
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43

Naremore, Rita, Ann E. Densmore, and Deborah R. Harman. Language Intervention with School-Aged Children: Conversation, Narrative and Text. Singular, 1994.

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44

Pladek, Birttany. Poetics of Palliation. Liverpool University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781786942210.001.0001.

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In the past twenty years, health humanists and scholars of literature and medicine have drawn on Romantic ideas to argue that literature can cure spiritual ills by making sufferers feel whole again. But this model oversimplifies the relationship between literature and pain, perpetuating a distorted picture of how Romantic writers thought literature addressed suffering. The Poetics of Palliation documents how writers like William Wordsworth and Mary Shelley developed more complex, palliative forms of literary medicine: therapies that stressed literature’s manifold relationship to pain and its power to sustain, comfort, and challenge even when cure was not possible. The book charts how Romantic writers developed these palliative poetics in conversation with their medical milieu. British medical ethics was first codified during the Romantic period. Its major writers, John Gregory and Thomas Percival, endorsed a palliative mandate to compensate for doctors’ limited curative powers. Similarly, Romantic writers sought palliative approaches when their work failed to achieve starker curative goals. The startling diversity of their results illustrates how palliation offers a more comprehensive metric for literary therapy than the curative traditions we have inherited from Romanticism.
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45

Winter, Stefan. Imperial Reform and Internal Colonization. Princeton University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691167787.003.0006.

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This chapter highlights major trends in Ottoman and Syrian history affecting the ʻAlawi community in the nineteenth century. It begins by showing that the ʻAlawi notability increasingly came into conflict with semiautonomous local officials during the breakdown of Ottoman imperial authority at the start of the century, causing the community as a whole to be cast as heretics and outcasts from Ottoman society for the first time. Faced with increasing discrimination and abuse by provincial officials, ʻAlawi feudal leaders nonetheless continued to support the diffuse authority of the Ottoman Empire over the intrusive statism of the Egyptian regime between 1832 and 1840. The ʻAlawi community was then increasingly subjected to repressive social engineering measures under the Tanzimat and the reign of Abdülhamid II, including military conscription and conversion. At the same time, however, while resisting efforts at assimilation, the ʻAlawis also began to avail themselves of the benefits of modern public schooling and proportional representation on newly instituted municipal councils, thereby finding their voice as a political community for perhaps the first time.
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46

Stokke, Andreas. Lying, Deception, and Deceit. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198825968.003.0001.

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This chapter presents the traditional view of lying, according to which to lie is to say something one believes to be false with the intent to deceive. It is argued that this view is too narrow in that lying does not necessarily involve intentions to deceive, and this alternative account of lying is defended against critical attempts to reconcile the deceptive view of lying with so-called bald-faced lying. The chapter ends by laying out the account of lying argued for in the book. According to this view, to lie is to assert something one believes to be false, where assertion is understood as saying something and thereby propose that it become part of the common ground of the conversation.
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47

McGowan, Mary Kate. Just Words. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198829706.001.0001.

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We all know that speech is harmful but we need to be as clear as possible about what the harms are and how the speech in question brings about those harms. Clarity on these two points is important for jurisprudential reasons. It is also important for social, political, and moral reasons. Just Words identifies a previously overlooked mechanism by which speech constitutes, rather than merely causes, harm. Speech constitutes harm when it enacts a norm that prescribes that harm (so that following the norm brings about the harm). Just Words argues that there is a ubiquitous but hidden way that speech enacts norms thereby highlighting important but previously overlooked constitutive connections between speech and harm. The investigation begins in the kinematics of conversation where it is argued that conversational contributions (surreptitiously but routinely) enact highly localized norms for the very conversation to which they contribute. It is then argued that the phenomenon generalizes to extra-conversational social practices. Just Words explores many categories of speech including sexist remarks, racist hate speech, pornography, verbal triggers for stereotype threat, micro-aggressions, political dog whistles, SLAM poetry, and even the hanging of posters. It also explores a variety of harms including oppression, subordination, discrimination, domination, harassment, and marginalization. In addition to exploring how speech enacts such harms, Just Words also explores ways to remedy those harms.
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48

Stainton, Robert J., and Christopher Viger. Two Questions about Interpretive Effects. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198791492.003.0002.

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Our exposition is framed around two questions: What interpretive effects can linguistic utterances have? What causes those effects? Lepore and Stone make an empirical case that some effects are contributions to the public record of a conversation determined by linguistic conventions—following Lewis—while non-contributions (our term) produced by imagination offer no determinate content—following Davidson. They thereby replace the old semantics–pragmatics divide by eliminating conversational implicature altogether. We critique Lepore and Stone’s position on empirical grounds, presenting cases in which contributions are made non-conventionally. We also critique their view methodologically, presenting a dilemma by which they either cannot handle many cases using their framework or they do so in an ad hoc fashion. We conclude by suggesting Relevance Theory as an alternative that follows Lepore and Stone’s purported methodology and handles many of their empirical cases.
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49

Cleese, John. Life and How to Survive It. Penguin Random House, 1996.

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50

Skynner, A. C. Robin. Life And How To Survive It. Mandarin, 1994.

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